TMZ reported that Lohan’s lawsuit against Pitbull was tossed out of a New York court.

Lohan sued the rapper in 2011 for using her name in his hit song “Give Me Everything,” dropping the line “I got it locked up like Lindsay Lohan.”

Lohan said Pitbull never got permission to use her name, so he had no right to profit from it. Which, of course, makes sense. Some of us won’t even listen to a band unless it has something to do with Lindsay Lohan.

The federal judge ruled because the song is a work of art — uh, really? — protected by the First Amendment, plus Lohan is barely mentioned in it.

Maybe that’s why she’s mad. Maybe Lindsay Lohan will go nuts and start suing rappers for not using her name in their songs.

The judge also said Lohan’s allegations that she suffered emotional distress didn’t quite pass inspection.

MARK HAMILL SAYS DISNEY TALKING WITH ‘STAR WARS’ VETS: Mark Hamill said he, Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford are all in talks with Disney about returning for the next “Star Wars.”

“They’re talking to us,” Hamill told Entertainment Tonight. “George (Lucas) wanted to know whether we’d be interested. He did say that if we didn’t want to do it, they wouldn’t cast another actor in our parts — they would write us out. We’re in the stage where they want us to go in and meet with Michael Arndt, who is the writer, and Kathleen Kennedy, who is going to run Lucasfilm. Both have had meetings set that were postponed — on their end, not mine. They’re more busy than I am.”

What I want to know is: Can they get the ewoks back? That’s sort of vital.

It’s not clear how much Hamill knows about the evolving plot of Episode VII, but he did share his own speculation. “I’m assuming, because I haven’t talked to the writers, that these movies would be about our offspring — like my character would be sort of in the Obi-Wan range (as) an influential character,” he said. “When I found out (while making the original trilogy) that ultimate good news/bad news joke — the good news is there’s a real attractive, hot girl in the universe; the bad news is she’s your sister. I thought, ‘Well, I’m going to wind up like Sir Alec (Guinness). I’m going to be a lonely old hermit living out in some kind of desert igloo with a couple of robots.'”

So that’s what happened to Mark Hamill.

According to Entertainment Weekly, Hamill wants as many of the original cast members to return as possible: “Another thing I’d want to make sure of is — are we going to have the whole gang back? Is Carrie and Harrison and Billy Dee (Williams) and Tony Daniels, everybody that’s around from the original (returning)? I want to make sure that everybody’s on board here, rather than just one.”

I don’t think Peter Cushing is going to make it.

Hamill also said he hoped director J.J. Abrams and Disney would go back to the original trilogy in an aesthetic sense. “I said to George that I wanted to go back to the way it was, in the sense that ours was much more carefree and lighthearted and humorous — in my opinion, anyway,” Hamill said. “I hope they find the right balance of CGI with practical effects. I love props, I love models, miniatures, matte paintings — I’m sort of old school. I think if you go too far in the direction of CGI it winds up looking like just a giant a video game, and that’s unfortunate. If they listen to me at all, it’ll be, ‘Lighten up and go retro with the way it looks.”

God bless you, Luke Skywalker.

It’s not clear if any returning actors would be central to the story. According to Entertainment Weekly, a source close to cast contract negotiations said that a script needs to be finished before talks progress, saying, “It will not be for weeks and perhaps months.”

SHIA LABEOUF DEPARTS PLAY: Shia LaBeouf has left the cast of Broadway play “Orphans” because of “creative differences,” according to the show’s producers.

In other words, he was being a pain in the rear and they suggested he find the door.

The answer, like all the great mysteries of our time, can be solved on Twitter.

The “Transformers” star took to Twitter, posting several emails exchanged with his fellow “Orphans” collaborators, according to Playbill.

A Feb. 19 email from Sullivan, titled “creative differences,” supposedly said, “I’m too old for disagreeable situations. you’re one hell of a great actor. Alec is who he is. you are who you are. you two are incompatible. I should have known it. this one will haunt me. you tried to warn me. you said you were a different breed. I didn’t get it. Dan”

Fox News reported that LaBeouf sent an email to Baldwin that read, in part, “Alec, I’m sorry for my part of a disagreeable situation.”

Then he posted an email to him signed “AB” (Alec Baldwin?):

“SL I’ve been through this before. It’s been a while. And perhaps some of the particulars are different. But it comes down to the fact that what we all do now is critical. Perhaps especially for you. When the change comes, how do we handle it, whether it be good or bad? What do we learn? I don’t have an unkind word to say about you. You have my word. AB”

To which LaBeouf responds, “same. … good luck on the play. you’ll be great.”

Doubtless, we’ll be hearing more about this.

“Orphans” is a revival of Lyle Kessler’s 1993 play about two orphaned brothers who kidnap a man. It is scheduled to begin previews March 19. The New York Times reported Thursday that Ben Foster (“3:10 to Yuma,” “The Messenger”) will replace LaBeouf.

KIM KARDASHIAN DONE WITH TV: Kim Kardashian is quitting “Keeping Up With the Kardashians.”

Is this some sort of trick?

After nearly five years of having her every move documented on TV, Kardashian is planning her exit from the reality show, she told Du Jour magazine. The upcoming season will be her last.

The soon-to-be mom wants her new family — her baby and boyfriend Kanye West — to enjoy life away from cameras. “My boyfriend has taught me a lot about privacy,” she said. “I’m ready to be a little less open about some things, like my relationships. I’m realizing everyone doesn’t need to know everything.”

Is this some sort of trick?

“When you live your life so publicly, like on a reality show, people assume that they know every side of you already,” she said. “But they always want more.”

She used her marriage to NBA star Kris Humphries as an example (technically they are still married, but split 72 days after their August 2011 wedding).

“Going through a divorce for anybody is devastating and heartbreaking, and then to have to do it and feel like you have to explain what is happening is such an awkward thing,” said Kardashian, 32. “You have to explain your choice to millions of people, and then they’re disappointed. I’m disappointed. Why are they disappointed?”

Gosh, it’s almost like she had a choice not to make millions of dollars on reality TV.

“I think there’s always an evolution of, you know, what you want to do in life,” she said. “It’s all about finding things that really excite you and motivate you and spark you all over again. I’m realizing that no matter what, if you go into something with all these expectations and plans, once you’re actually living it, it could be completely different.”

Be sure to keep tuning in for the exciting announcement of Kim Kardashian’s triumphant return to television. It shouldn’t be long.

A little more than eight years after they tied the knot, the 48-year-old “Cinema Verite” actress, and the 45-year-old “Gangster Squad” actor have split, reps for the couple told Us Weekly.

The magazine quoted an insider as saying “It was a mutual decision. It is very amicable. It’s not ugly, it’s just over.”

The pair, who married in August 2004, split a couple of months ago. They have no children together.

This will be the second divorce for both. Lane was married to actor Christopher Lambert from 1988 to 1994. During the same time span, Brolin was married to actress Alice Adair, with whom he has two kids, Trevor, 24, and Eden, 18.

1959: The inaugural Daytona 500 race was held; although Johnny Beauchamp was initially declared the winner, the victory was later awarded to Lee Petty.

1967: More than 25,000 U.S. and South Vietnamese troops launched Operation Junction City, aimed at smashing a Vietcong stronghold near the Cambodian border. (Although the communists were driven out, they later returned.)

1973: The United States and China agreed to establish liaison offices.

1980: The “Miracle on Ice” took place in Lake Placid, N.Y., as the United States Olympic hockey team upset the Soviets, 4-3. (The U.S. team went on to win the gold medal.)

1993: The U.N. Security Council unanimously approved creation of an international war crimes tribunal to punish those responsible for atrocities in the former Yugoslavia.

2003: Jesica Santillan, the teenager who’d survived a botched heart-lung transplant long enough to get a second set of donated organs, died two days after the second transplant at Duke University Medical Center in North Carolina.

2008: Turkish troops crossed into northern Iraq in their first major ground incursion against Kurdish rebel bases in nearly a decade. Singer-actress Jennifer Lopez gave birth to twins, a girl and a boy. Civil rights activist Johnnie Carr died in Montgomery, Ala., at age 97.

2012: Two Marine Corps helicopters collided over a remote section of the California desert during a nighttime exercise, killing seven Marines. A jury in Charlottesville, Va., found University of Virginia lacrosse player George Huguely V guilty of second-degree murder in the death of his ex-girlfriend and lacrosse player Yeardley Love in May 2010.

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